Archive: May 9, 2010 - May 15, 2010
Everyone can heal and be healthier
Dean Ornish and Deepak provide independent viewpoints on ways that everyone can heal and be healthier at TEDMED 2009....
By Deepak Chopra | May 14, 2010; 8:40 PM ET | Comments (0)
The court, religious diversity, and evangelical absence
I've never met an evangelical kid who aspired to be a Supreme Court judge. I wonder whether our traditional emphasis on grace and mercy and admission to heaven rather than justice and law in this world now has contributed to this pattern.
By David Gushee | May 14, 2010; 9:15 AM ET | Comments (5)
No 'religion test' for office, but nominees should be quizzed
It's fine to ask judicial nominees what role, if any, their religious or moral beliefs would play in their decision-making on the bench, and what they would do if they perceived a conflict between their religious or moral beliefs and a result dictated by the Constitution.
By Melissa Rogers | May 14, 2010; 9:10 AM ET | Comments (0)
Diversity is good; Religious tests for office are not
Elana Kagan's Jewishness should not have been a consideration in her appointment. However, should the absence of a Protestant turn into an extended condition of many years, it might well become an issue in American public life, creating distance between the public and the Court.
By David Saperstein | May 14, 2010; 9:01 AM ET | Comments (1)
Respecting the cross and the law
The theft of the Mojave cross desecrates our rule of law as much as it does this religious symbol.
By David Saperstein | May 14, 2010; 8:57 AM ET | Comments (5)
The rule of law, not Lords
The position that we should hold as religious people who also believe in the rule of law is that we expect and hope that those appointed to the Supreme Court will be brilliant lawyers and supremely fair minded, and that they will interpret the law, rather than push their own belief system to the disadvantage of any other.
By Julia Neuberger | May 14, 2010; 8:18 AM ET | Comments (0)
Evangelicals will rise to replace old Protestant establishment
The death of the Protestant Establishment in the United States is nothing to mourn. They tried to beat ideas with power, but they failed as such people always do. In 2050 Evangelicals will be the "new" group that will appear on the Court.
By John Mark Reynolds | May 13, 2010; 6:00 PM ET | Comments (51)
Touched by a Text
We tend to intellectualize Shavuot with our emphasis on study. Yet, when we read the book of Ruth, we find moments of great emotional tenderness.
By Erica Brown | May 13, 2010; 10:02 AM ET | Comments (0)
Non-sectarian laws and judges
Judges display moral and ethical rectitude and the ability to judge equitably. I am sure this can be done irrespective of whether they are Jews, Catholics or Protestants or, for that matter, Hindus, Muslims or Buddhists.
By Arun Gandhi | May 12, 2010; 6:36 PM ET | Comments (0)
No Protestants? Also no non-Abrahamic faiths
Using his own criteria, Obama could take a large step in the direction of diversity on the Court by nominating an Asian Hindu (Hinduism is the third largest religion in the world), a Buddhist, or someone from one of the other Asian religious traditions.
By Ramdas Lamb | May 12, 2010; 3:11 PM ET | Comments (1)
Court composed of individuals, not categories
Differences in mainstream religions are considered almost trivial. A conservative Protestant tends to be one in mind with a conservative Jew or a conservative Catholic. The same goes for liberals.
By Ronald Rychlak | May 12, 2010; 2:44 PM ET | Comments (0)
The Supreme Court and the American mind
Personally, if a religious test for Supreme Court membership were not illegal, I would want membership restricted to devotees of "America's religious traditions." My preference would not be a matter of prejudice. Rather, my preference would be a matter of national identity, the particularity of the American civilization sustained by the American mind.
By Willis E. Elliott | May 11, 2010; 8:23 PM ET | Comments (6)
Justices need not be Protestant to do their jobs well
As a Protestant, I am proud that our nation's Protestant founders gave us the gift of separation of Church and State. Thanks to their wisdom, for a Supreme Court nominee, just as for our elected representatives, the question of religion ought not to be a question at all
By Janet Edwards | May 11, 2010; 2:45 PM ET | Comments (1)
Religion should play no role in Supreme Court nomination
With the confirmation of Elena Kagan as the newest Supreme Court Justice, the court will have no Protestants. It will also have no Muslims, Buddhists, or Atheists (at least no avowed ones). Fine. Justices are sworn to uphold the Constitution, not their personal religious beliefs.
By Pamela K. Taylor | May 11, 2010; 1:39 PM ET | Comments (17)
"No religious test" should mean no religious test
It is no accident that 91 of the 112 nominees to the Court have been Protestants. The fact that all of the seats on the Supreme Court may soon be filled by Roman Catholics and Jews is a fitting, if somewhat ironic, end to the religious tokenism of the past.
By Charles C. Haynes | May 11, 2010; 11:35 AM ET | Comments (0)
Judicial wisdom knows no denominational bounds
The underlying issue for many of us is whether the courts will deal with religious rights--including the rights of those of us who hold to moral views that are increasingly unpopular in the larger culture--in ways that promote and preserve a genuine religious pluralism. I do not think that such a vision is linked to what church or synagogue or mosque a person attends.
By Richard Mouw | May 11, 2010; 10:48 AM ET | Comments (0)
Other issues eclipse religion as important characteristics
Perhaps we have begun to take seriously the "no religious test" principle in Article VI of the Constitution. In today's post-denominational religious milieu, other issues seem to eclipse religion as important characteristics -- gender, ethnicity, judicial experience and constitutional philosophy.
By J. Brent Walker | May 11, 2010; 10:13 AM ET | Comments (0)
Issue is brilliance, not balance (by gender or faith)
Why is it that gender experience is relevant, but religious experience is not? Why is it that a court with which more American can identify in terms of gender is important, but one with which they can identify in terms of faith, is not? The issue should be brilliance, not balance.
By Brad Hirschfield | May 11, 2010; 10:10 AM ET | Comments (3)
We need a prophetic (not necessarily Protestant) justice
Prophetic justice protects the rights and liberties of the unpopular, the misunderstood, the despised. Prophetic justice protects the rights of minorities and works to keep society's prejudices from holding back those who are talented and hard working but who happen to be the wrong color, sex, sexual orientation, ethnic heritage or class.
By Valerie Elverton Dixon | May 10, 2010; 7:47 PM ET | Comments (0)
The need for a liberal Protestant ethos on the Supreme Court
There cannot be a religious test for office under our Constitution. But the kind of Protestant spirit that drove the "Founding Fathers" to disestablish religion (i.e. make it unconstitutional for states to financially support their favorite Protestant denomination) has a place in the mix, especially these days.
By Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite | May 10, 2010; 5:59 PM ET | Comments (1)
Protestants, not to worry
Protestants made decisions for us all; the Jewish and Roman Catholic justices will do the same and the country will be all right, or maybe even better and stronger.
By Susan K. Smith | May 10, 2010; 5:17 PM ET | Comments (2)
A Kagan, not a Stevens
Kagan seems like a decent person and probably better on church-state separation than most sitting justices; however, Kagan is definitely not a Stevens, one of the finest United States Supreme Court champions for separating religion from government.
By Herb Silverman | May 10, 2010; 4:34 PM ET | Comments (5)
The Supreme Court vis-a-vis the Supreme Being (or not)
Religious correctness demands that we pretend it doesn't matter. But religious conviction does matter, as we have seen time and time again in Scalia's contention that American governmental power derives from God.
By Susan Jacoby | May 10, 2010; 2:18 PM ET | Comments (71)
In this case, only relevant scripture is Constitution
Although there is every likelihood that there will be a new Quaker judge at the Circuit Court level - and thus a future Supreme Court nominee of the Friendly persuasion - I really don't care if the High Court has "one of my kind" on it. I want the best and the brightest, people of integrity, folks who know their Constitution from a hole in the ground.
By Max Carter | May 10, 2010; 2:02 PM ET | Comments (1)
One manner of law
Never mind the profound differences in faith perspectives among the three Jews and six Roman Catholics in question. If a Supreme Court Justice puts the Constitution's mandates ahead of all other concerns, then she or he is doing the job, and the personal exercise of First Amendment rights should not matter.
By Jack Moline | May 10, 2010; 12:02 PM ET | Comments (0)
Measuring religious representation on the court
In the best of all possible worlds, or even in worlds slightly better than the one we have, citizens would pay attention to the U. S. Constitution's rejection of religious tests for office. However, since "everyone else" is violating the Constitution, "everyone" plays the game of keeping score.
By Martin Marty | May 10, 2010; 11:17 AM ET | Comments (2)
Still no religion test
The religious values held by Justices of the Supreme Court, as they are interwoven with issues of public policy, may matter -- but absolutely not in the sense of "Which religion do you belong to?"
By Arthur Waskow | May 10, 2010; 11:14 AM ET | Comments (0)
On the court, law is supreme, not religion
The "numbers game" counting Protestants, Catholics and Jews on the bench ought to be as unimportant as the number of blacks and women. It is the law that should be supreme and not a judge's religious faith.
By Cal Thomas | May 10, 2010; 11:11 AM ET | Comments (19)

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